Paris: Survivor Holocaust France has condemned the anti-vaccination protesters compared themselves to Jews persecuted by Nazi Germany during World War II.
French officials and anti-racism groups joined 94-year-old children in expressing anger.
Because more than 100,000 people marched in France on the rules of the government vaccine on Saturday, several demonstrators wearing a yellow star who remember the people who were forced by the Jews.
Other demonstrators carry signs of awakening the Auschwitz death camp or the apartheid regime of South Africa, claiming the French government is unfair to persecute them with anti-pandemic steps.
“You can’t imagine how annoyed I was “I used the star, I knew what it was, I still had it in my flesh, ” Szwarc, who was deported from France by the Nazi, said with tears in his eyes.” It is the task of everyone not to allow racist waves that are outrageous, antisemitics, Beyond us.
“French state secretary for military affairs, who also attended the ceremony, called the protesters’ actions” could not be tolerated and embarrassed for our Republic.
“The international league against racism and anti-Semitism said the protesters were” mocked the victims of the Holocaust ‘”.
‘And minimize crime against humanity carried out during World War II.
Saturday’s protest involved a mixture of angry people to the government for various reasons, and especially the right supporters.
Prominent French French numbers have been punished in the past antisemitism, racism and denying the Holocaust.
The government introduces a Monday bill that requires all health care workers to be vaccinated against Coronavirus and requires Covid feeds to enter restaurants and other places.
In a large protest in Paris on Saturday against the vaccine rules, a demonstrator attached a star behind reading “not vaccinated.
” Bruno Auquier, a member of the 53-year-old city council who lives on the outskirts of Paris, drawing a yellow star.
On the story and sharing the band Arm with a star.
“I will never be vaccinated,” said Auquier.
“People need to wake up,” he said, questioning the security of the Covid-19 vaccine.
Auquier expressed concern that new steps would limit both of his freedom and promised to take them out of school if vaccination became mandatory.
Polling suggests.
The French people supported the steps, but they had pushed anger in several places.
Vandal targets two vaccination centers in southwestern France over the weekend.
One was burned, and the other closed graffiti, including reference to the Nazi France job.
France has reported more than 111,000 deaths in pandemic, and new cases that are confirmed increasing again, raising concerns about new pressure in hospitals and further restrictions that will damage work and business.